The 789 square kilometres (305 sq mi) site lies on the north-western coast of the Northern Territory, some 65 kilometres (40 mi) south-west of Darwin. The floodplain is mainly seasonally inundated paperbark and sedge swamps. The bay is dominated by sand, salt and mudflats with a shoreline of mangroves and mangrove-lined channels, grasseddunes and patches of samphire.[1]
Fog Bay
Fog Bay is a bay of the Australian coast, located approximately 65 kilometres (40 mi) south-west of Darwin, Northern Territory.
The shallow bay is approximately 25 kilometres (16 mi) wide and extends from Native Point at its north-east end to Point Jenny to the south-west. The town of Dundee Beach is at the north-east end of the bay. The coastline includes the mouth of the Finniss River, which enters around the middle of the bay. The coast north of the mouth is mostly sandy flats, whereas south of the Finnis the coastline is made up of intertidal mud flats backed by mangroves.[2]
The Fog Bay and Finniss River Floodplains have been identified as an Important Bird Area.